The map has been warped onto a globe
and shown at four orientations. The top left is the Saturn-facing
hemisphere (centered at 0 E) --
Titan is tidally locked so that the same side always
faces Saturn (similar to the Earth's Moon and the Earth). The
bottom left is the anti-Saturn hemisphere, where Saturn is never in
the sky (180 E). The top right is the leading hemisphere (faces forward in
Titan's orbit, 270 E), and the bottom right is the trailing hemisphere
(90 E). As we watch Titan rotate from the Earth (or HST) we see the
top left rotate into the top right, the bottom left, the bottom
right, ... . Note that the longitudes given are in geographical,
as opposed to astronomical, coordinates, so that east longitude
increases to the right on maps.

These images are a mosaic made from the original 850LP images (that
is, the Hubble images have not been deconvolved). The total contrast
is only plus or minus about 4% of the total light collected through the
filter. The solid red-brick color at the top and bottom
shows regions which could not be imaged through the haze (incidentally,
this color shows the average intensity). The gap in coverage extends
to the equator at about 10 deg longitude (top left) due to a
96 hour gap in coverage.